Hopwin wrote:
Well ****, that's much better put than my drivel above.
I also find it interesting that based on your theory that the abnormal identities tend to cluster into counter-culture groups that then create and perpetuate their own norms (ie: Goths, the Punk movement of the 60's&70's, Straight-Edge, even gangs to an odd extent, etc).
They do. The maxim--"Birds of a feather flock together."--holds much truth in that there's either a biological or instinctive impulse to "be with those like me." We see this in dating and relationship paradigms, particularly as it relates to physical appearance and "race." The impulse for anti-miscegenation laws and behavior isn't so much racism as a manifestation of some core desire for things which are comfortable. "Sameness" provides a level of comfort that "alien" cannot. At least, that's how this works in the "West", so to speak. To think of it politically, nationalism is a manifestation of that desire to be like everyone else, no matter tenuous, arbitrary, or simple the likeness might be. [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-colonialism]Post-Colonial Theory[/i], particular as it relates to nomad cultures in a post-empire/post-colonial region, covers a lot of ground on this subject. Obviously, Queer Theory applies as well because we're dealing with boundaries and cross-pollination of value sets. To put it back in terms of counter-cultures and sub-cultures, they are not so much identity sets until themselves but attempts to accept that which is different into the broader group. It is, interestingly enough, a problem unique to socially and ethnically heterogeneous society such as Western Europe and the United States. The nomad, in particular, becomes of interest because boundary concepts don't exist within said societies and cultures. Nomadic peoples and individuals move where life takes them (quite literally). Consequently, the Western compulsion to establish borders and countries created a foreigness in the nomad not present in run-of-the-mill ethnic xenophobia. The nomad is dangerous not because they represent someone different, but because the nomad by default must exist outside the thought-constructs and thought-rules of bordered societies.
Going back to organizations, the institutional nomad becomes either a pariah or a prophet. Because they can traverse the rule sets and normatives of a given organization without consequence, they either find themselves outside and leaving; or, as if often the case with charismatic and creative individuals, they become the impetus for changing the culture and direction of the organization (this can be either good--think Juan Williams and Fox News; or it can be bad--Vilfredo Pareto and the Italian Government).
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Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.